The police report for ousted CEO Gurbaksh Chahal paints a picture of a man out of control

Gurbaksh Chahal, former CEO of RadiumOne. Getty Images/Charley Gallay Gurbaksh Chahal, the tech executive who was ousted from RadiumOne, the advertising technology company he founded, in 2014 after pleading guilty to misdemeanor domestic violence charges, is facing new troubles.

The San Francisco police arrested Chahal in October in a different incident after a woman he was dating said he kicked her multiple times. He was released on $100,000 bail, according to arrest records seen by Business Insider.

The San Francisco Business Times first reported the latest arrest Tuesday and confirmed with the San Francisco District Attorney's Office that Chahal's probation for the earlier misdemeanor charges could be revoked.

Chahal has not been charged with a crime as a result of the arrest, and the District Attorney's Office motion to revoke probation will be heard in front of a judge in September.

Business Insider reviewed the San Francisco Police Department's case report on Chahal.

After being ousted from RadiumOne, Chahal started a new ad tech company called Gravity4. A representative for Chahal and Gravity4 called the arrest report "frivolous and baseless" and "false," with no further comment.

Here's some of what the arrest report contains:

According to the report, Chahal was angry over the way the woman had spoken to his security guard in a fight over condoms, so while laying in bed, he kicked her in the right leg and thigh multiple times. She later went to the hospital and was released. Police have a cell-phone photograph the woman sent to her husband on the night of the incident, the report says. (The woman was married to somebody else.)

The night after the incident, Chahal and his security guard asked an employee of Gravity4 to search the woman's phone for photos of Chahal's prescriptions, according to a report from that employee. The woman reported that the employee used her phone while she spent the night at Chahal's house and that it was wiped clean of data the next day. The employee said in the report that he had tried to guess the password several times before a message popped up saying the phone was going to be wiped for guessing too many wrong passwords (this is a common feature in corporate mobile security systems).

This wasn't the first time Chahal had shown aggression, according to the woman's statements. She said Chahal would ask her questions during an argument and grab her by the hair until she answered, according to the report.

Another time, the woman said, she suffered a bruised her wrist after Chahal pushed against a wall. She told authorities she never called the police because Chahal never made threats toward her, but she later felt that he could influence her immigration status.

The woman told the police that she and Chahal drank three to five shots of tequila and two to three beers after work. "Additionally he would take 10 to 13 pills, antidepressant and sleeping pills one to two hours before bed," the police chronology said. "He would also drink alcohol while under the influence of the pills. Usually he is very mellow and becomes almost unconscious at times." An employee for Gravity4 gave police a higher number, saying "50-60 pills of various prescription medications a day," according to the report.

The police chronology also said Chahal's security guard would record his yelling at his dog at night and show it to him when he woke up.

In December, Chahal and his attorney filed a motion to compel discovery of a police report of the woman. The woman had been taken into custody 11 days before the incident on an involuntary psychiatric hold because she was intoxicated on alcohol, painkillers, and sleeping pills, according to the report in Chahal's case filing. A judge denied the motion in January.